Academic literature on the topic 'Leichhardt'

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Journal articles on the topic "Leichhardt"

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Stephens, Matthew. "From Lost Property to Explorer' s Relics: The Rediscovery of the Personal Library of Ludwig Leichhardt." Historical Records of Australian Science 18, no. 2 (2007): 191. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/hr07008.

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In late 1853, a small number of unclaimed boxes containing the worldly possessions of the missing explorer Ludwig Leichhardt were deposited at the Australian Museum, Sydney. An estimated 137 volumes of Leichhardt's books and pamphlets were stored alongside his manuscripts, field notes, seed specimens and scientific instruments. While the manuscripts have proved invaluable to those researching the life and work of Leichhardt, his books have lain forgotten and virtually irretrievable in the collections of the State Library of New South Wales and the Australian Museum Research Library. A significant proportion of the library has now been identified and its contents listed and described for the first time, providing new insight into Leichhard's intellectual background and interests.
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Hurley, Andrew, and Katrina Schlunke. "Leichhardt after Leichhardt." Journal of Australian Studies 37, no. 4 (December 2013): 537–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14443058.2013.845929.

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Lewis, Darrell. "The Fate of Leichhardt." Historical Records of Australian Science 17, no. 1 (2006): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/hr05010.

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In 1848 an expedition led by German scientist Ludwig Leichhardt set out from Moreton Bay (Brisbane) with the intention of crossing the continent to the Swan River (Perth). The trip was expected to take two to three years, but instead the entire expedition disappeared and its fate remains a mystery to this day. It is now recognised that in his time Leichhardt was the best-trained scientist-explorer to have visited Australia, having studied under many of the most eminent European scientists and absorbed the works of others, including the great Alexander von Humboldt. Because of this, I argue that his 1848 expedition was not intended to be merely an east-west traverse of the continent. I determine what route Leichhardt planned to follow and show that he chose this route with several 'Humboldtian' aims in mind. If his expedition had succeeded, it would have been the greatest land-based scientific expedition in Australia's history, and Leichhardt would arguably now be venerated as the father of Australian landscape ecology. From the time it was realised Leichhardt's expedition was lost, many theories have been put forward as to its fate. Most suggest that the expedition perished somewhere in western Queensland or in the vicinity of the Simpson Desert. I present evidence to suggest that Leichhardt followed his proposed course and that this took him far from the Simpson Desert-Central Australian region, that in fact he made it more than two-thirds of the way across the continent and perished in the area where the Tanami Desert meets the Great Sandy Desert.
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Barrett, Lindsay. "The Leichhardt refrain." Journal of Australian Studies 39, no. 4 (October 2, 2015): 546–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14443058.2015.1077263.

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Darragh, Thomas A. "Ludwig Leichhardt: Four Previously Unknown Letters to John Nicholson and the Involvement of Ferdinand von Mueller in Publishing Leichhardt's Letters." Historical Records of Australian Science 29, no. 2 (2018): 153. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/hr18006.

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Two previously unknown letters written by Ludwig Leichhardt to his friend John Nicholson and sent to Ferdinand von Mueller were published in the Adelaide German newspaper Australische Zeitung in 1882. A third letter to Nicholson has been found as a copy in a Leichhardt diary and a fourth letter has been found in a volume of autograph letters in Brisbane. Translations of these letters are provided here and their significance indicated. The translation of another Leichhardt letter that proved to be controversial, and was attributed to Mueller, is shown not to have been translated by him. A transcription and translation of a previous unknown letter to Eduard Hallmann is provided in the Supplementary Material.
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Fensham, Roderick J. "Leichhardt's ethnobotany for the eucalypts of south-east Queensland." Australian Journal of Botany 69, no. 4 (2021): 185. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/bt21007.

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The explorer Ludwig Leichhardt travelled with Aboriginal people in south-east Queensland during 1843–44. Leichhardt’s record of Aboriginal taxonomy in Yagara, Wakka, Kabi, and other languages was related to the current taxonomy of the eucalypts of south-east Queensland. Most of the taxonomic entities could be associated across cultures and verifies the intimate understanding of Aboriginal peoples with tree species that are difficult to distinguish in the field. Leichhardt’s record together with that of Gairabau, a Dungidau man from south-east Queensland verifies a broad array of uses for eucalypts including as gum for chewing, dying, and medicine; ash rubbed into the skin for soothing young mothers, where bees, honey and wax can be found, hollow logs for fish-traps, hard timber for weapons and utensils, bark for shelter, canoes, embalming, and containers – some species contained water, others were used to create smoke for sending signals, some species indicated an unsuitable camp-site, and others indicated the likelihood of finding koalas and possum as game. Flowering and the shedding of bark are signs for the bush calendar.
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Olierook, Hugo K. H., Evelyn M. Mervine, Richard Armstrong, Rowena Duckworth, Noreen J. Evans, Bradley McDonald, Christopher L. Kirkland, et al. "Uncovering the Leichhardt Superbasin and Kalkadoon-Leichhardt Complex in the southern Mount Isa Terrane, Australia." Precambrian Research 375 (July 2022): 106680. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.precamres.2022.106680.

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Olierook, Hugo K. H., Evelyn M. Mervine, Richard Armstrong, Rowena Duckworth, Noreen J. Evans, Bradley McDonald, Christopher L. Kirkland, et al. "Uncovering the Leichhardt Superbasin and Kalkadoon-Leichhardt Complex in the southern Mount Isa Terrane, Australia." Precambrian Research 375 (July 2022): 106680. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.precamres.2022.106680.

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Sliwa, Renate, and Joan Esterle. "Rangal Supermodel 2015." APPEA Journal 56, no. 2 (2016): 598. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/aj15104.

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More than 6,000 boreholes were compiled to develop a consistent regional scale stratigraphic framework for the Permian Rangal, Baralaba and Bandana coal measures (CMs) within the Bowen Basin. Coal beds and tuff horizons were used as stratigraphic markers, supported by chemostratigraphy and age dating. Results corroborate the general subdivisions of these different coal measures relative to basin location, but increase resolution on migrating depocentres in response to foreland loading and subsidence on coal thickness and splitting patterns. In the north, the Rangal CMs comprise two main seams, correlated as Leichhardt and Vermont. The Yarrabee Tuff is consistently present and splits the Vermont seam. The main Leichhardt seam exhibits relatively simple offset stacking relationships with the underlying Vermont and overlying Phillips seams. In the southwest, the Bandana CMs comprise two to three significant seams—the Aries-Castor, Pollux (Leichhardt equivalent) and Orion—along with the Pisces containing the Yarrabee Tuff. Seams exhibit complex Z splitting and vertical interburden stacking. Locally super-thick seams (crabs) form from convergence of thinner split seams in areas of relative stability over basement highs. In the Taroom Trough, the Baralaba CMs show the greatest response to loading, as seams thin and split along the eastern margin. The variability in the splitting patterns, coupled with the coal measures total thickness, corroborate the extension of the final basin depocentre northward, which was not preserved.
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Wimmer, Adi. "Der junge Leichhardt und Wir (DVD, 2007)." Zeitschrift für Australienstudien / Australian Studies Journal 2122 (2008): 240–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.35515/zfa/asj.2122/200708.35.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Leichhardt"

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Fiedler, Horst. "Ludwig Leichhardt und Alexander von Humboldt." Universität Potsdam, 2007. http://opus.kobv.de/ubp/volltexte/2010/4172/.

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Die persönliche Begegnung des Studenten Leichhardt mit Humboldt, die hier unter Einbeziehung noch unbekannter Quellen beschrieben wird, verlief enttäuschend. Dennoch stellte sich der junge Australienreisende, wie weiterhin gezeigt wird, ganz bewusst in ein Verhältnis von Vorbild und Nachfolge gegenüber dem berühmten Lateinamerikaforscher. Seine geographische Leistung machte Leichhardt, ungeachtet mancher Unterschiede, zum „Humboldt Australiens“;. Abschließend schildert der Beitrag das Eintreten Humboldts für die persönliche und wissenschaftliche Anerkennung seines märkischen Landsmannes, der seit 1848 im Inneren Australiens verschollen ist.
As a student, Leichhardt met Humboldt, but this encounter was a failure. Yet, the young man who travelled Australia saw himself as a successor to the eminent explorer of Latin America. Despite the differences between the two geographers, Leichhardt’s geographical achievements made him the “Humboldt of Australia”. The paper describes how Humboldt interceded in favour of his fellow countryman from the Mark both as a person and as a geographer who was last heard of in 1848 when he explored the interior of Australia.
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Südfels, Aliya-Katarina. "Ludwig Leichhardt und Alexander von Humboldt." Universität Potsdam, 2012. http://opus.kobv.de/ubp/volltexte/2012/6144/.

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Im Juli des Jahres 1841 kommt es zu einem Treffen zwischen zwei Männern, das zunächst belanglos erscheint, sich aber Jahre später als wichtige historische Begebenheit herausstellen wird. In seinem Pariser Büro empfängt der 71jährige Naturforscher Alexander von Humboldt den jungen Preußen Ludwig Leichhardt. Der angehende Naturwissenschaftler erhofft sich Zuspruch und Empfehlung des berühmten Alexander von Humboldts. Die Unterredung ist kurz und verläuft für Leichhardt ergebnislos. Es wird das einzige Treffen der beiden Naturwissenschaftler bleiben. Aus heutiger Sicht unverständlich, da Ludwig Leichhardt und Alexander von Humboldt mehr verband, als ihre Leidenschaft für die Naturwissenschaften. Viel zu wenig ist sich bis jetzt den biographischen Analogien und den vergleichbaren geographischen Leistungen der beiden Preußen gewidmet worden.
During July 1841 a meeting between two men takes place, which seems to have been extraneous, but turns out to be a significant historical incident. 71 year old natural scientist Alexander von Humboldt welcomes young Ludwig Leichhardt from Prussia in his office in Paris. The prospective young scientist expects help and references from famous Alexander von Humboldt. The conversation is short and ends from Leichhardt’s point of view without results. Unfortunately this is going to be the only meeting between the two scientists even though the two Prussians have more in common than their passion for the natural sciences. Way too seldomly have biographical analogy and geographical productivity of the two men been compared.
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Harris, Tony School of History UNSW. "Basket weavers and true believers : the middle class left and the ALP Leichhardt Municipality c. 1970-1990." Awarded by:University of New South Wales. School of History, 2002. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/19325.

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In the two decades between 1970 and 1990, hundreds of people passed through the ALP branches of Leichhardt Municipality. These were predominantly members of what this thesis calls a 'middle class Left', employed in professions and para-professions like teaching or the public service and motivated, to one degree or another, by the social movements and politics of the late 1960's and early 1970's. This is a social history incorporating the life histories of a selection of these people. It is set against the backdrop of conflicts with incumbent, conservative, working class-based political machines and the political climate of the times. The thesis is in four parts. Part I, the introduction, establishes the point of view of the writer as it shapes what is also a 'participant history'. In this context, and that of the oral history interviews, the introduction addresses the relationship between memory and history. Parts II and III are the body of the thesis and each is lead by a 'photo-essay', recognising the complimentary importance of a visual narrative. Part II sets out the broad political topography of the 1970's and early 1980's. Chapter one describes the middle-classing of the ALP in Leichhardt Municipality, set against a review of the principal literature. It then moves through chapters two to four to examine the three loci of middle-classing: Annandale, Balmain and Glebe. Part III moves on into the 1980's when the middle class Left 'takes power'. It examines, in chapter five, the emerging, sharp, divisions among the Left on Leichhardt Council and in the contests for federal and state parliamentary seats. Chapter six examines the deepening of these divisions in the mid to late 1980's, concluding with the climactic struggle over the Mort Bay public housing project. Chapter seven looks at the diaspora of the Labor Left in Leichhardt at the end of the 1980's as the branch membership declined and many sought out political alternatives to the ALP. Part IV brings the thesis to its conclusion, focussing on the complexities and ambiguities of the middle class Left and drawing out the main socio-political themes of the two decades.
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Harris, Tony. "Basket weavers and true believers : the middle class left and the ALP, Leichhardt municipality c. 1970-1990 /." 2002. http://www.library.unsw.edu.au/~thesis/adt-NUN/public/adt-NUN20031029.144404/index.html.

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Hoolihan, Tanya Louise. "Beyond exploration: illustrating the botanical legacy of the German/Australian explorer Friedrich Wilhelm Ludwig Leichhardt based on his written observations, letters and herbarium specimens 1842-1844." Thesis, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1395086.

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Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Ludwig Leichhardt is synonymous with Australian exploration, yet his achievements extend well beyond the success of his overland expeditions. Beyond exploration, Leichhardt was a passionate observer of Australian natural history, who left a significant legacy of collected and written material, especially in the field of botany. The recent translations of his diaries recorded between 1842 and 1844 have exposed a lesser known period of Leichhardt’s life and helped to evidence him as a capable and diligent scientist. The published materials combined with Leichhardt’s collected plant specimens establish the foundation for my research and have subsequently informed my outcomes. From my research I have painted a series of botanical illustrations depicting specimens that were observed, recorded and collected by Leichhardt more than 170 years ago. The documentation of this research and creative methodology from field observations through to the final illustrations visually depicts Leichhardt’s historical contribution to Australian botanical science while providing information on creative process to botanical illustrators.
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Murison, C. "Characteristics and ore genesis of the Mount Cuthbert deposit, Kalkadoon-Leichardt Belt, Mt Isa Inlier, north west Queensland." Thesis, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/2440/118206.

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The Mount Cuthbert mine is situated ~100km NE of Mt Isa near the eastern edge of the Kalkadoon Leichhardt Belt (KLB); a Proterozioc block of the Mt Isa Inlier that divides the world class mineral regions of the IOCG-style Eastern Fold Belt (EFB) and the Mount Isa style copper deposits of the Western Fold Belt (WFB). KLB hosted deposits display characteristics related to both the EFB and WFB style of mineralisation; however mineralisation at Mount Cuthbert is indicative of a genesis for KLB hosted deposits related to metasomatic and tectonic events responsible for mineralisation in the EFB. The Mount Cuthbert mine is a low tonnage-high grade, shear controlled, retrograde chalcopyrite-pyrite-pyrrhotite deposit hosted within silica-dolomite and biotite-chlorite altered schists and felsic volcanic units of the Leichhardt Volcanics. The paragenetic alteration sequence is composed of 5 alteration stages: Stage 1) sodic alteration (albite + quartz); Stage 2) K-Fe-Ca alteration (siderite + calcite + dolomite+ quartz + biotite ± magnetite ± ilmenite ± apatite ± pyrite); Stage 3) mineralisation (chalcopyrite + quartz ± pyrite ± pyrrhotite ± calcite ± chlorite); Stage 4) major chloritisation; Stage 5) oxidation and localised enrichment to chalcocite. The alteration halo within the deposit is characterised by a proximal alteration envelope (<50m) consisting of chalcopyrite, pyrite, quartz, dolomite and chlorite, an intermediate alteration envelope (50-500m) described by quartz-carbonate veining with minor chalcopyrite, pyrite and pyrrhotite, in addition to extensive biotite and chlorite alteration and minor magnetite alteration. A distal alteration envelope (>500m) is identified tentatively as albite dominant. The trace geochemistry of the main chalcopyrite ± pyrite ore phase reveals elevated Ni, Zn, Cd and Hg in pyrite and elevated Sn, Pb, Se, V, Cr, Te, Ga, As, Cd, Mo, Ga, Bi and Sb in chalcopyrite. Differing elemental trends within the ore minerals supports paragenetic evidence suggesting several phases of sulphide growth. The characteristics and features of the Mount Cuthbert deposit outlined in this study show the greatest number of similarities to other low tonnage-high grade, shear hosted deposits present in the KLB (i.e. Mighty Atom, Orphan). This suggests that despite having a genesis related to that of the EFB, KLB deposits are uniquely their own style of mineralisation. This supports a shear-zone associated exploration model that is specific to the KLB.
Thesis (B.Sc.(Hons)) -- University of Adelaide, School of Physical Sciences, 2015
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Del, Bono Andrea. "Chinese and Italian place brands in contemporary Sydney : assembling ethnicity and/in the city." Thesis, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:37623.

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This thesis is based on an ethnographic study conducted in Sydney, Australia, to investigate the relations between ethnicity and the city filtered through the practice of place branding. I adopt a comparative case study that addresses the production and application of what I call ‘ethnic place brands’ to two precincts named Chinatown/Haymarket and Leichhardt (Little Italy), with the aim of dynamising the type of analysis proposed, for example, in the ‘immigrant economy’, ‘ethnic precinct’ and ‘urban tourism’ literatures, where ethnicity is often conceived as a quality contained within demarcated urban units and treated as a static essence that defines unchanging categories of collective identification. In contradistinction, this thesis argues that ‘ethnic place brands’ are complex assemblages that are put together in contingent and disaggregated processes of representation and identification defined by inherent tensions between the need to essentialise for marketing purposes and increasing degrees of cultural complexity. My work unfolds in two main parts. The first three chapters are dedicated to the overview of the emergence of ‘precincts’ as a point of departure for the analysis of the entanglements between culture, ethnicity and the city in global urban discourses and how they become visible in the Sydney context. ‘Ethnic place brands’, I argue, are social, cultural and economic constructs that increasingly drive revitalisation projects targeting some of these urban areas, where ‘difference’ has been reworked across a series of narratives spanning from ethnic marginalisation to ethno-specific service provision to end up becoming strategic points of competitive differentiation. By framing Chineseness and Italianness within this paradigmatic shift, this thesis proposes a theoretical framework for understanding ethnicity and/in the city, which takes into account the complex system of value production in which place branding practices are embedded, while respecting the multiplicity of discourses that frame the making of difference. Street ethnography is introduced in this context as a mobile, creative and selfreflexive method of inquiry that enables to ‘act’ on this complex phenomenon (Chapter Four). In the second part of the work I look at the brand management strategies for the two precincts that are the focus of my investigation to describe the way in which ethnicity can be understood beyond the limits of static representation. Chapter Five illustrates how Chineseness has become a ‘flexible’ brand for Chinatown/Haymarket, which incorporates different meanings into the production of a brand identity based on ambiguous articulations of ‘multi-Asianness’. These converge on a ‘flexible platform’ that makes bounded notions of Chinatown morph into the more spatially porous Haymarket. The production of Leichhardt’s brand, on the other hand, remains confined within ‘rigid’ representations of Italianness, which systematically disavow the increasingly complex fabric of the precinct; in Chapter Six I discuss how the continuing attempts to mobilise Italianness result into a series of competing and mutually exclusive conceptions of Little Italy contextualised by a narrative of decline. Lastly, in Chapter Seven, the role of the Chinese and Italian communities as integral parts of the two ‘ethnic place brands’ is considered. My argument is that ‘ethnic place brands’ shed light on the ‘ethnic community’ as a temporarily assembled network of stakeholders, defined by strategic positioning and instances of alignment or discord over the aims of the two brand management strategies. This thesis brings different levels of urban analysis in conversation with one another and replaces the essentialised and static conceptualisations of ethnicity that loosely circulate to advertise the specificity of ‘ethnic precincts’ with a more nuanced, description of place branding as an abstract, complex and networked process, which is less dependent on fixed conceptions of space and difference and more oriented towards the type of fluid relations by which ethnicity and the city are constantly reconfigured. I address ‘ethnic place brands’ as platforms of plural and contested meanings and treat them as instances that offer the opportunity to imagine what Amin and Thrift (2002) call ‘new sociospatial vocabularies’ based on the understanding of cities as spaces of heterogeneity and circulation.
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Trainor, Johanna Jane. "Australian urban squatters of the 1970s: establishing and living a radical lifestyle in inner‑city Sydney." Thesis, 2021. http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1420912.

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Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Insensitive urban renewal projects and invasive freeway constructions in the inner‑city of Sydney provoked widespread resistance throughout the 1970s. This thesis traces the interconnections between the highly contentious squatting campaigns that took place in 1973 in Victoria Street, Kings Cross, and the concurrent Glebe anti-expressway movement which opposed the decimation of the historic suburb by the New South Wales state government’s planned radial expressway system. Both of the mobilisations claimed a “right to the city” and demanded the decentralisation of political control over the urban environment, the retention of low-income housing and community participation in the decision-making processes. The Victoria Street occupation demonstrated the power of people over their living conditions and uniquely combined self-help with protest while simultaneously expressing an alternative vision for social organisation in an urban environment. At the same time, the Glebe anti-expressway movement successfully halted the state government’s radial expressway scheme, saving not only housing in the historic suburb of Glebe from demolition but also all of the remaining houses purchased by the Department of Main Roads in the eastern suburbs. These actions together paved the way for the Glebe Estate to become a microcosm of alternative living and politics. This thesis argues that the alternative political and social spaces created by the Victoria Street squatters ignited city-wide squatting campaigns. Drawing on oral history interviews with the participants and personal archival materials, and informed by theories of urban social movements, this research also explores the collective social enterprises and women’s services initiated by the feminist movement and ex-Victoria Street squatters in vacant houses on the Glebe Estate. The study identifies other protest actors who realised the potential of collective empowerment through autonomous political action and who established housing co‑operatives and creative social enterprises in vacant Department of Main Roads properties on the other side of the city in Darlinghurst and council properties in Pyrmont. In contextualising and identifying the interconnectivity of these protest actions, this research presents a case study of a mid-20th century international phenomenon: the ways in which contested urban environments could generate radical experiments in alternative living arrangements, social services and political action which challenged not only conventional government decision-making but also the authority of the state in the realm of daily life.
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Conway, Judith (Jude). "The Newcastle women’s movement in the 1970s and 1980s through the lens of Josephine Conway’s activism and archives." Thesis, 2022. http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1430745.

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Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
From the late 1960s, women in the Australian industrial city of Newcastle, New South Wales (NSW), joined women around the world in agitating for a broader role in all areas of society and Josephine Conway was one of those women. Josephine raised awareness of, and campaigned on, many of the feminist causes of the 1970s and 1980s. She was passionate about women’s healthcare, protested against women’s objectification in the media, and lobbied for legislation that offered legal parity for women. She fought never-ending battles for the right to legal and affordable pregnancy terminations; and campaigned for equal employment opportunities and the provision of childcare services. Josephine supported women’s activism in the peace movement and for women’s ordination; and was involved in the blossoming of feminist spirituality and creativity in Newcastle. Using Josephine’s extensive archives as a lens, supplemented with oral histories from campaign allies, the thesis explores their pathways to feminism and shared activism. It dissects the women’s groups which Josephine joined, and the modes of operation and relationships within them, as well as the actions that were carried out in pursuing their feminist causes. The themes that emerge are, first that Josephine’s role in the women’s movement was that of the ‘committed individual’ posited by Gerda Lerner as necessary for social change. Second, the thesis demonstrates the wide range and value of the macro and micro-actions undertaken by Josephine and her cohorts in mounting and maintaining effective campaigns. Third, this study reveals the web of relationships and the flow of ideas, tactics and artefacts along transnational and national feminist pathways, and between the capital cities and the regions, which were essential for bringing about nationwide change. In doing so it reveals an important regional story which has not previously been included in histories of the Australian women’s movement.
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Books on the topic "Leichhardt"

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Finger, Hans Wilhelm. Leichhardt: Die ganze Geschichte von F.W. Ludwig Leichhardt. Göttingen: Niedersächsische Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Göttingen, 1999.

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John, Bailey. Into the unknown: The tormented life and expeditions of Ludwig Leichhardt. Sydney: Pan Macmillan Australia, 2011.

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Der Australienforscher W. Ludwig Leichhardt in der Botanik. Schweinfurt: Wiesenburg, 2008.

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Leichhardt, Ludwig. Einblick in den Schriftwechsel des Australienforschers Ludwig Leichhardt. Schweinfurt: Wiesenburg, 2012.

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Beyond Leichhardt: Bushcraft and the exploration of Australia. South Fremantle, W.A: Fremantle Arts Centre Press, 1996.

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Solling, Max. Leichhardt: On the margins of the city : a social history of Leichhardt and the former municipalities of Annandale, Balmain and Glebe. St. Leonards, N.S.W: Allen & Unwin, 1997.

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Leichhardt, Ludwig R. H. Der Australienforscher F.W. Ludwig Leichhardt in der Zoologie: Deutsch-Englisch = The Australian explorer and naturalist F.W. Ludwig Leichhardt in the zoology : German-English. Schweinfurt: Wiesenburg, 2005.

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C, Eck Reimer, Finger Hans Wilhelm, Mittler Elmar, and Tappenbeck Inka, eds. Australien: Die europäische Erforschung von den Anfängen bis Ludwig Leichhardt (1848). Göttingen: SUB, 2001.

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Finger, Hans Wilhelm. Leichhardt: Die ganze Geschichte von F.W. Ludwig Leichhardt, Träumer, Forscher und Entdeckungsreisender in Australien ; erzählt von ihm selbst and seinem Chronisten nach seinen hinterlassenen Tagebüchern, Briefen und Reiseaufzeichnungen. Göttingen: Niedersächsische Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Göttingen, 1999.

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M, Webster E., ed. An explorer at rest: Ludwig Leichhardt at Port Essington and on the homeward voyage, 1845-1846. Carlton, Vic: Melbourne University Press, 1986.

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Book chapters on the topic "Leichhardt"

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Rauscher, Raymond Charles, and Salim Momtaz. "Planning Leichhardt, Greater Sydney." In Cities in Global Transition, 73–93. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-39865-5_5.

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Jürgen, Tampke, and Doxford Colin. "Ludwig Leichhardt and other explorers." In Australia, Wilkommen, 38–63. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003352877-3.

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Del Bono, Andrea. "Migrant entrepreneurs and urban cultural economy in Sydney, the ‘City of Villages’: Haymarket's ‘Chinatown’ and Leichhardt's ‘Little Italy’." In Rethinking Privilege and Social Mobility in Middle-Class Migration, 113–29. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003087588-8.

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"Nazi Leichhardt." In Ludwig Leichhardt's Ghosts, 133–63. Boydell & Brewer, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1qv22r.11.

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"Leichhardt the Cold Warrior." In Ludwig Leichhardt's Ghosts, 164–94. Boydell & Brewer, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1qv22r.12.

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"Germany." In The Letters of F.W. Ludwig Leichhardt, 1–39. Hakluyt Society, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315556154-1.

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7

"Into Exile." In The Letters of F.W. Ludwig Leichhardt, 41–394. Hakluyt Society, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315556154-2.

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8

"Taking Leichhardt Home to Germany with Georg Neumayer." In Ludwig Leichhardt's Ghosts, 73–92. Boydell & Brewer, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1qv22r.8.

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9

"DECONSTRUCTING LEICHHARDT: PETER CAREY AND THE EXPLORER MYTH." In Rewriting History, 141–50. Brill | Rodopi, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789042030718_009.

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10

"Ferdinand Mueller, the Ladies Committee, and German-Australian Seekers of Leichhardt." In Ludwig Leichhardt's Ghosts, 46–72. Boydell & Brewer, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1qv22r.7.

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Reports on the topic "Leichhardt"

1

Savings Bank of New South Wales - Leichhardt - Index of Depositors Accounts - "A-Z" - 1911-1913. Reserve Bank of Australia, March 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.47688/rba_archives_2006/21842.

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2

Commonwealth Bank - Head Office versus GSB - inter-bank 8 oar race Leichhardt carnival - 14 February 1920 (plate 180). Reserve Bank of Australia, March 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.47688/rba_archives_pn-003118.

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3

Savings Bank of New South Wales - Leichhardt - Signature Register - Accounts 1-5520 (Accounts 1-3155 only opened) - 1911-1927. Reserve Bank of Australia, March 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.47688/rba_archives_2006/21839.

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4

Savings Bank of New South Wales - Leichhardt - Depositors Ledgers - Accounts 2001-4000 (Accounts 2001-3052 only opened) - 1913-1915. Reserve Bank of Australia, March 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.47688/rba_archives_2006/21835.

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5

Commonwealth Bank - Leichhardt Carnival - Head Office versus Government Savings Bank - Inter-bank eight oar boat race - 14 February 1920 (plate 299). Reserve Bank of Australia, March 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.47688/rba_archives_pn-003115.

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